Brooklyn Eagle_20202703

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BROOKLYN EAGLE

Volume 19, No. 28 Volume 20, No. 29 Volume18, 19,No. No. 51 Volume 18, No. 26 25 Volume 14

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2019 MARCH 26, 20208,21, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2019 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2018 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2017 1,

The case for Brooklyn's GIFT complete Hottest BASKET streets Graphic Irving celebrates A Q&A with birthday by feeding Danny Harris, Novelist hungry New Yorkers the new leader Two Sections

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Photo by Daniel Garcia

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Scaling the Heights: Arts Patron Shen Brings Fashion Into Unique Perspective

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Artist: Leon Polk Smith. Gallery: Lisson Gallery.

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Nets’ Irving celebrates birthday by giving

Brooklyn Nets' Kyrie Irving (11) during the second half of an NBA game against the Chicago Bulls on January 31 in New York.

AP Photo/Frank Franklin II

Donates $323,000 to feed New Yorkers during COVID-19 crisis By John Torenli, Sports Editor Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Nothing has come easy for Kyrie Irving during his first season in Brooklyn. The six-time NBA All-Star, who came here last summer alongside fellow superstar Kevin Durant, scored 50 points in his Nets debut at Barclays Center on Oct. 23, but missed a potential game-winning shot as the buzzer sounded in a 127-126 overtime loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves. Irving was the Nets’ leading scorer and assists man and among the top point producers in the NBA when a right-shoulder impingement cost him nearly two months of his first season here in our fair borough. Even after he returned from that injury, Irving flashed the form that made him so attractive as Durant’s running mate during General Manager Sean Marks’ summer free-agent windfall. He poured in a season-high 54 points in a 133-118 rout of the Chicago Bulls in Downtown Brooklyn back on Jan. 31, but went down with a knee injury in Washington D.C, the very next night. Irving will not take the hardwood again for Brooklyn this year, even if the league returns from this ongoing pause due to the COVID-19 outbreak, after having surgery to repair his right shoulder back in February.

Founded in 1841 by Isaac Van Anden

The Brooklyn Eagle (USPS Number 019555) is published every week on Thursday except the last week in December and the last week of August for $50 per year by EBrooklyn Media, 16 Court St., 30th Fl., Brooklyn NY 11241. Telephone: (718) 643-9099, ext: 103. Periodicals postage paid in Brooklyn, NY. Postmaster: Send address changes to Brooklyn Eagle, 16 Court St. 30th Fl., Brooklyn, NY 11241. Publisher: EBrooklyn Media, LLC (jdh@brooklyneagle.com) Managing Editor: Jim Harney Legal Editor: Rob Abbruzzese Sports Editor: John Torenli Religion Editor: Francesca Tate Community Editor: Mary Frost

2 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, March 26, 2020

But on Monday, his 28th birthday, Irving decided to so something that will doubtlessly endear him to Nets fans and New Yorkers for the remainder of his tenure here. The 28-year-old New Jersey native announced that he is donating $323,000 to help feed city residents who are having difficulty putting food on the table during his tumultuous and turbulent time. “Thank you for all the birthday love, I’m extremely grateful for the support” Irving said via his Instagram account Monday. “Seeing the effects of COVID-19 reach our loved ones, our schools, our jobs, and access to food has really impacted me. “I am excited to partner with @feedingamerica and @lineagelogistics to launch the Share A Meal campaign to help marginalized communities get the food resources they require during his time, and to work with our local partner @cityharvestnyc to distribute 250K meals to my neighbors in need across the NY area. In addition to that I am donating $323K to Feeding America and @lineagelogistics will match $250 K of what we raise together.” The charitable gesture, which is dedicated to Kobe Bryant, the NBA legend and friend of Irving’s who died in a tragic helicopter crash alongside his daughter on Jan. 26, won’t help the Nets make the playoffs or get Irving back on the court in time to help them when or if the season resumes. But it will go a long way toward getting in-need New Yorkers the food they can’t get for themselves during a time where virtually everyone is struggling to figure out how much more impactful this novel virus will be on residents. “I am asking my fans, friends, family and partners to join me in helping our communities by donating at the link in my bio,” Irving’s post continued. “Thank you to everyone on the front line working to keep all of us safe, healthy and fed. Together we can change the world one small gesture at a time.” Irving’s birthday gesture plays well in any arena, regardless of whether his first season here in Brooklyn has been an up-anddown struggle that came to an unfortunate end. Nothing But Net: Interim Nets Head Coach Jacque Vaughn went a perfect 2-0 after replacing Kenny Atkinson, leading Brooklyn to victories over the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers before the NBA suspended play on March 11. Vaughn, a former NBA player and head coach of the Orlando Magic from 2012-2015, was just getting acclimated to his new post when the season was suspended in advance of Brooklyn’s scheduled

game in San Francisco against the Golden State Warriors. “I think overall that it’s a great challenge ahead of us, 20 games to make some noise and get the most out of this team and out of this year,” said Vaughn from Sunset Park’s HSS Training Center before Brooklyn topped the Bulls in his debut. “Guys seem excited about that challenge, and also seemed excited about just being open and honest and just transparent with communication and relationships.” ... The Nets will have 18 games remaining on their regular-season schedule when the league returns to action, unless the NBA decides to shorten that slate in advance of its postseason, which could run into August if play continues at all this year.

Kyrie Irving listens during a time out in the second half of agame against the Washington Wizards on Feb. 1 AP Photo/Nick Wass


Brooklyn mourns iconic seltzer man Eli Miller By Francesca Norsen Tate Brooklyn Eagle

Brooklyn native Eli Miller, who gained the moniker “the sultan of seltzer” and was one of the last remaining old fashioned seltzer salesmen, has died. Although his death was just announced publicly this past Tuesday, Miller died at his Brooklyn home on March 12 of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease according to a March 24 New York Times obituary. He was 86. “Eli Miller lives and breathes seltzer. He has been lugging 70 lb. seltzer cases across Brooklyn his entire life,” read his bio from the Brooklyn Jewish Historical Initiative’s website. The blurb was published shortly before Miller was honored in the BJHI’s 2017 Brooklyn Jewish Hall of Fame. Miller’s career of selling seltzer to Brooklynites spanned six decades, a longevity that might even be linked to the fact that Miller was born on the summer solstice — the longest day of the year: June 21, 1933. He was raised in Brighton Beach and graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School. During Miller’s day, marketing seltzer was more colorful and dramatic than in today’s culture, when one simply grabs a bottle from a supermarket shelf. In fact, Miller had a word for eltzer sold in plastic bottles: “dreck.” An old fashioned seltzer man like Miller had customers and turf. During the 2017 Brooklyn Jewish Hall of Fame presentation, Miller, in his raconteur style, told the story of how he got into the business as a young person. He took a huge risk at the time: He coaxed a store manager for whom he worked into “lending” him 40 cases of a beer that was a favorite in Bedford-Stuyvesant at the time. Miller then sold those cases on credit to the community. After realizing that the cost of maintaining a liquor license cut into his profits, young Miller found his niche in the seltzer business for the next six decades, delivering the beverage in glass bottles to individual homes and building his customer base into a business. He even had his father, Meyer Miller (a retired house painter) help him on deliveries. Tragically, Meyer Miller

Brooklyn Jewish Historical Initiative board member Rita Schwartz interviewed honoree, Brooklyn seltzer man Eli Miller, in 2017.

Eagle photo by Francesca N. Tate

died of a heart attack during a delivery run. Upon his retirement in 2017, Miller sold his business to Alex Gomberg, whom Miller trusted to be as impassioned about seltzer as himself. Gomberg is the youngest member of the Brooklyn Seltzer Boys, another company specializing in the product. On the day he was honored, Miller brought along Gomberg, complete with a table of seltzer bottles, syrups and milk, to make for this audience the famous Brooklyn egg cream. Seltzer is a crucial ingredient in the egg cream. “Made with a little chocolate syrup (traditionally Brooklyn-made Fox’s U-bet), a splash of milk, the rest of the glass full of plain

seltzer. The milk and soda give an egg cream the froth of a root-beer float, but it isn’t too sweet,” reads the BJHI website. Miller was one of the subjects featured in the book “Seltzertopia: The Effervescent Age,” by Barry Joseph, who spent a day with him on his route. The related website of the same name had posted several videos and other tributes to Miller as of Wednesday afternoon. Miller was also the hero of a children’s book that fellow Brooklynite and longtime customer Ken Rush wrote and illustrated. Rush, an author, artist and longtime upper school visual arts teacher at the Packer Collegiate Institute, wrote in his 1993 book titled “The

Seltzer Man” (MacMillan Publishing Company): “A delivery man sees his job in a new light when he takes two young helpers along on his route. After ‘schlepping seltzer’ throughout Brooklyn for 40 years, Eli feels ready to retire — ‘My truck’s worn out, and folks don’t want to fuss with my old bottles and crates anymore,’ — but Beth and her sister are fascinated by his work, and jump at Eli’s suggestion that they accompany him on his rounds. The final stop on a busy delivery day is Coney Island, for ‘lunch on the boardwalk’ and a ride on the Wonder Wheel. The girls’ wide-eyed enthusiasm convinces Eli that he’s not quite prepared to park his truck for good.”

Death and funerals in the time of coronavirus former state senator in attendance and the owners and friends from the restaurants my friend frequented. That was it. My friend would have understood, but I couldn’t help but think he deserved better. In what would have been a convoy-like processional of cars heading to the cemetery — there were only four — the hearse, an SUV with my friend’s immediate family and two other cars with four close friends. And because of the Diocese’s edict, there was a long line of processionals all trying to enter the cemetery before the noon closing. “The passing of a loved one is always a difficult time for a family and those closest to them,” Monsignor Kieran Harrington wrote in a statement from the Brooklyn Diocese. “My message to those who are afraid is that a priest will always be available graveside as loved ones are laid to rest,” he added.

By John Alexander BQ Daily Eagle

On Tuesday, March 17, a very close friend passed away. He had been struggling for a while with health-related issues and finally succumbed to his ailments. My friend was a community leader who ran a foundation that supported numerous charities and institutions throughout Brooklyn and beyond. And while he was born in New York City, he spent most of his life in Bay Ridge. Normally, his death would have brought out civic leaders and elected officials from across the city. But these are not normal times and his death just happened to coincide with some of the most drastic measures taken by the church and the state during the time of the coronavirus outbreak. Wake was by invitation only The wake was by invitation only at the discretion of his immediate family. No more than 10 people were to be in the funeral home at one time, and due to social distancing, at least 6 feet apart from each other. Throughout the viewing those coming to pay their respects adhered to the restrictions. Rather than hugging the family to offer their condolences, they instead touched elbows and exchanged meaningful words and pained expressions. The following morning at the funeral Mass, the monsignor presiding over the service announced that this would be the last funeral Mass in Brooklyn Diocese. The cemetery was also scheduled to close at 12 noon on Friday, March 20. Diocese statement The Diocese statement explained that funerals, weddings, and baptisms would no longer be

Brooklyn’s famous Green-Wood Cemetery permitted in church. For funerals, graveside services outdoors would be permitted, maintaining the recommendations of the CDC regarding social distancing and at the discretion of the cemetery administration. The Diocese further stressed, a memorial Mass for the deceased can be celebrated later. Weddings and baptisms would be postponed to a later date. “We want to ensure that there cannot be any more possible exposure to the virus at one of our Churches in Brooklyn and Queens,” said

Photo courtesy of Green-Wood Historic Trust

Brooklyn Bishop Nicolas DiMarzio. “This was not an easy decision to make, however, the safety of our parishioners and our priests, deacons, and religious and parish staff weigh heavily on my mind,” DiMarzio added. The final funeral Mass The final funeral Mass for my friend was surreal. In a church that under other circumstances would have been packed with mourners, there were at most 25 people in attendance including his immediate family. There was one

Short graveside service There was a short graveside service before all threw the final rose on the casket and headed home. Restaurants and bars were closed, so there was no opportunity for a mercy meal to share warm memories of the departed or raise a toast to a life well lived. We all just nodded, tapped elbows and blew kisses to each other, comforted only by the fact that my friend was no longer suffering and finally reunited with his wife, the love of his life, who had preceded him in death. And while the entire nation is now enduring the impact of the coronavirus crisis, here’s hoping that the dark cloud hanging over us will be lifted and we can better remember and pay tribute to all of our departed friends and family members sooner rather than later. Thursday, March 26, 2020 • Brooklyn Eagle • 3


THIS WEEK IN HISTORY

5

Founded 1841

CENTS

From the Original Eagle and Other Sources

TEST AIR RAID BEFORE DAWN AROUSES CITY Many violations noted as residents turn on lights at home

In this Jan. 23, 1942 photo, nurses, organized to protect patients in Brooklyn's newest medical center, Adelphi Hospital, at Greene Ave. and Adelphi St., demonstrate how they would go about their duties during an air raid while wearing gas masks. Left to right are Margaret Husson, Anne Palmer, and Josephine Scacciaferro. Brooklyn Daily Eagle photographs, Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Collection

BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE MARCH 23, 1943 By Paul Blauvelt

on and started traffic moving, and the all-clear at 5:31 ended the drill which the army ordered at the request of the Mayor.

The howl of air raid sirens broke the dark stillness of the hour before dawn today, heralding the first surprise test of the new triple-signal routine and ruining the sleep of the city’s millions. The first screams of the blue signal sounded at 4:56, routed thousands of wardens from warm beds and sent them into the streets in sub-freezing temperatures. The thermometer hugged 26 as the wardens scurried to their posts in preparation for the red signal, the wavering note signifying “planes overhead.” It came at 5:11, plunging the city generally into blackness – or at least such blackness as could be achieved with a brilliant full moon shining from a cloudless sky. For nine minutes, white helmets of wardens and police bobbed through the streets, their occupants shooing stragglers into doorways and yelling and whistling at lighted windows behind which disbelieving scrubwomen and sleepy-eyed residents went about their normal routines. The second blue, at 5:20, brought streetlights

Violations noted From Civilian Defense headquarters in Manhattan came an official report: “In general it was good.” But observers, especially in the downtown Brooklyn area, noted many violations. In some buildings, whole floors remained lighted right through the drill while wardens tried in vain to make someone hear their whistles. The biggest problem seemed to be among householders, whose instinctive tendency seemed to be to turn on a light on awakening to see what time it was. Wardens had their troubles in such cases, but there were no serious violations according to early reports. The returns from the raid drill put Mayor LaGuardia in a jovial mood. The official figures he gave out showed that prompt response was made by 76,708 wardens, 4,638 auxiliary firemen, 4,906 city firemen who were off duty at the time, 6,6,43 policemen off duty and 880 City Patrol officers and men.

‘Spring Cleaning Week’ proclaimed to spur salvage drive in borough BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE MARCH 25, 1942 Borough President [John] Cashmore today proclaimed next week the borough’s official Spring Housecleaning Week and called on all Brooklynites to search out their cellars, attics and storerooms for materials that may be used in war production. The six-day drive starting Monday will seek to uncover many tons of forgotten scrap items in addition to the salvage which is already being collected. The slogan for the week will be: “Put Your Scrap Into the Scrap to Clean Up the Axis.” The drive will be directed by the Brooklyn Salvage Committee, of which Harry Zeitz and Mrs. Harry H. Tracey are co-chairmen. A meeting of

salvage workers, civilian defense aides, representatives of women’s clubs and civic groups will be called by Mrs. Tracey for Monday at the Civilian Defense Volunteer Office auditorium, 131 Livingston St., to launch the campaign. In his proclamation, Mr. Cashmore said: “It is fitting that Brooklyn, which has long been famous as the ‘Borough of Homes’ and before that as the ‘City of Homes,’ should send a great stream of salvage material to the war industries.” Scrap of all kinds – old stoves, plumbing fixtures, auto parts, wire, broken tools, waste rubber, old newspapers and magazines, burlap, old clothes – will be taken up without inconvenience to the housewives who ferret it out. A salvage clearing house has been set up, Mrs.

‘TYPHOID MARY’ CAUGHT

Traced to Corona, L.I., and placed under quarantine BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE • MARCH 28, 1915 Dr. S.S. Coldwater, Commissioner of Public Health, yesterday announced that ‘Typhoid Mary’ Mallon, who, the Commissioner said, was ‘the greatest typhoid germ carrier in the country,’ had been located at Corona, L.I., and this afternoon 4 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, March 26, 2020

quarantined on North Brother Island. ‘Typhoid Mary,’ the Commissioner said, was released from North Brother Island in 1910, after she had been there three years. Her case is a remarkable one in medical history; although not ill herself, she carries the typhoid infection with her.”

Workers at the New York Association for the Blind’s lighthouse sort aluminum rivets swept up from aircraft factory floors for salvaging, Feb. 17, 1942. AP Photo Tracey announced, and all a householder need to is telephone MAin 5-0061. An accredited junkman will be sent for the material and will pay to the housewife the full value of the articles at prevailing salvage rates. If the householder wishes the scrap material to go to the Salvation Army, Goodwill Industries of Brooklyn, Boy Scouts, St. Vincent de Paul Society or any of the other charitable or welfare organizations which collect salvage material, that will be arranged, too, by calling the central salvage office for Brooklyn, Mrs. Tracey said. Housewives who want their scrap material to do double duty by having the salvage money used for air raid warden

expenses in the precincts through the Brooklyn Salvage Committee may designate such use to the committee. Department of Sanitation trucks toured the city today in the second series of tin can collections to help the war effort. The trucks will pick up the scrap again tomorrow. The last two collections were held March 11 and 12, resulting in a pile of 157 tons for war conversion. Brooklyn gave 45 tons of the total and Queens gave 34. The next collections will take place on April 8 and 9 and are expected to result in even greater piles of scrap to help scrap the Axis.


News From Your Neighborhood BROOKLYN PRINCIPAL DIES OF CORONAVIRUS

BROWNSVILLE — A Brooklyn principal is among 125 city residents who have died of the coronavirus, according to CBS New York. Dezann Romain was principal of the Brooklyn Democracy Academy in Brownsville. She was the first known New York City public school staff member to die of the virus, CBS New York said. In a statement, Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza offered his condolences, saying, in part, “We’ll be there for the students and staff through whatever means necessary.” 

NYC HAS 5 PERCENT OF CORONAVIRUS CASES

CITYWIDE — Three weeks after its first coronavirus infection was discovered, the New York City region reached an alarming milestone on Sunday, according to The New York Times. It now accounts for roughly 5 percent of the world’s confirmed cases, making it an epicenter of the pandemic and increasing pressure on officials to take more drastic measures. Moving to stem the crisis on multiple fronts, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York pleaded with federal officials to nationalize the manufacturing of medical supplies and ordered New York City to crack down on people congregating in public. He suggest� ed some streets could be closed, allowing pedestrians more space, the Times said. 

RIDERSHIP DOWN ON SUBWAYS AND BUSES

CITYWIDE — Ridership was clearly down yesterday on all MTA transit systems, but some straphangers are still taking trains and buses, according to amNewYork. If ridership continues to stay down, it could create a multimillion-dollar loss to the system that might lead to massive cuts in services. Most riders have been advised not to enter fully-loaded trains, amNewYork reported. The MTA reported a 60 percent drop in ridership on Monday. 

COME ON AND TAKE A FREE RIDE

CITYWIDE — With dwindling ridership on New York trains and buses due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority announced recently that riders could essentially ride for free on all local bus routes, the Brooklyn Reporter website said. Additionally, it was implementing a rear door policy to keep passengers at a safe distance from the bus driver. On express buses, riders will board as normal and pay a fare. However, they will not be permitted to sit in the first three rows of the bus to ensure customers are a safe social distance from bus operators. 

WILLIAMS WANTS DE BLASIO TO SUSPEND CONSTRUCTION

CITYWIDE — New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams is calling on Mayor Bill de Blasio to suspend all non-essential construction work to prevent the further spread of coronavirus, according to the New York Post. “This painful step is needed as part of the city’s aggressive social distancing policy, to protect the health of construction workers, their families, and the general public,” Williams wrote in a letter to de Blasio that was also signed by Councilmembers Brad Lander and Carlos Menchaca of Brooklyn. The three lawmakers wrote the letter after the Post revealed that some construction workers are showing up for work even while sick. 

RANKS OF BROOKLYN VOLUNTEERS GROW

PARK SLOPE — Volunteers have flooded signup lists across Brooklyn and New York City with offers of help for people at risk from the new coronavirus, according to Patch. Park Slope resident Lily Pollak helps to manage one such list, “COVID-19 Support for Elderly and Immunocompromised in Brooklyn.” So far, 125 volunteers have signed up, Patch said. One volunteer, Lauren Yaffe, posted that she can do “whatever is needed” for people living in Park Slope and a wide assortment of Brooklyn neighborhoods. “I love to walk!” she wrote. “Have shopping cart, will travel.” 

BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY PROGRAMS GO ONLINE

BOROUGHWIDE — The Brooklyn Public Library system has moved several community services to the web, according to

A woman wears a mask and gloves while waiting for a Manhattan bound R Train at the 77th Street Station in Brooklyn on March 12. Eagle photo by Paul Frangipane

the Brooklyn Paper. Library staffers have worked tirelessly to continue to offer their many free programs by computer, such as story time for kids, creative writing contests, gaming sessions and career services. Librarians have started recording story-time sessions with their phones from their living rooms and broadcasting them live on the library’s Facebook page. 

CRISIS UNVEILS SHORT-STAFFING PROBLEMS IN NURSING HOMES

CITYWIDE —About two-thirds of the nursing homes in New York City are staffed below the national average, according to Gothamist. Before the lockdown, many people visited their relatives in the homes for several hours every day. Now, however, those hours are curtailed. In fact, the state Health Department has instructed nursing homes to stop all visits. However, hospice patients can still receive patients. “We have always been worried about nursing home staffing levels, and we are even more worried now,” said Susan Dooha, director of the Center of the Independence of the Disabled. Dooha wants state health inspectors to step up their presence. 

RENDERINGS SHOW EAST FLATBUSH BUILDING

EAST FLATBUSH — Renderings from S. Wieder Architect offer a look at a planned seven-story, mixed-use building at 2708 Snyder Ave. in East Flatbush, according to New York YIMBY. The corner property will eventually contain 105 rental apartments, two stories of commercial space and a 53-vehicle garage. Amenities will include a laundry room, a theater, an exercise room, a yoga room and bike storage. Residents will also have access to shared space on the roof, New York YIMBY said. Developer Anshel Friedman has not yet revealed a timeline for the project, although construction is already under way. 

INDUSTRY CITY HAS NEW CORONAVIRUS CASES

INDUSTRY CITY — Industry City, the 16-building complex on the Sunset Park waterfront, had two additional cases of COVID-19, according to the New York Post. The commercial-industrial complex sent emails to tenants and employees in Buildings 2 and 4, notifying them that people who had recently worked there had tested positive for the virus. In Building 2, the infected person was last seen on campus on March 4. The Building 4 patient was there as recently as March 10, according to the Post.

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BROWNSTONER FEATURES $2.1M BED-STUY BROWNSTONE

BEDFORD-STUYVESANT — Brownstoner is spotlighting a five-bedroom brownstone at 773 Hancock St., Bedford-Stuyvesant. In the dining room, period details such as the original tin ceilings, mantel and built-in china cabinet are still in place. A walk-through bar area connects the kitchen and dining room. A screened-in porch extension leads to a backyard garden. The home also has stained-glass windows in some areas. It is several short blocks to the J train’s Halsey Street station and near neighborhood cafes such as the MacDonough Café, Chez Alex and L’Antagoniste, Brownstoner said. 

NADLER, MALONEY WANT ASSISTANCE FOR MUSEUMS

BOROUGHWIDE — U.S. Reps. Jerrold Nadler (D-Brooklyn-Manhattan) and Carolyn Maloney (D-Brooklyn-Queens-Manhattan) have requested that Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy include $4 billion in federal assistance for nonprofit museums in their recovery package. They said in a recent letter, “Museums in New York State support 61,000 jobs and generate $5.4 billion in revenue.” Funds for museums usually come through fundraising, exhibits, educational programs and retail sales, but “without patronage, the earned revenue stream has evaporated overnight,” the legislators said. 

THREE INJURED AFTER FIRE BLAZES THROUGH HIGH-RISE

CONEY ISLAND — Three people were injured in Coney Island Tuesday after their seventh-floor apartment was hit by fire, according to amNewYork. The two injured civilians, a couple in their 50s, were taken to Coney Island Hospital in stable condition. A firefighter was also treated for minor injuries at the same hospital, amNewYork reported. The fire broke out around 5:50 a.m. at the Harborview Complex at 2920 West 21st St., a 12-story subsidized apartment building. Nearly 100 firefighters and EMS personnel responded to the incident, as well as police officers from the 60th Precinct. Firefighters found the injured couple in a stairwell. 

SOMEWHERE, OVER THE RAINBOW

COBBLE HILL — Residents of Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, Boerum Hill and Gowanus have begun hanging rainbows in their windows, according to Pardon Me for Asking. One mother told the well-known blog that “It is a lovely reminder for all of us that in a storm, there is still something to look forward to.” There is even a Google “rainbow map” to which you can add your own multi-colored arch, along with pictures of other rainbows that you spot around the neighborhood.

Week of March 26 - April 1, 2020 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 1INB


2 • EAGLE NEWS MEDIA — HOME REPORTER AND BROOKLYN SPECTATOR • Week of March 27-April 2, 2020

Sign Up Now! New York City Schools Account schools.nyc.gov/nycsa Get the latest about coronavirus and NYC Public Schools, remote learning, free breakfast and lunch, and more.

4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of February 27 – March 4, 2020

IS LEAD DUST POISONING YOUR CHILD? LEAD DUST IS A SERIOUS HEALTH THREAT. CALL 311 TO REPORT DUST FROM CONSTRUCTION. IT’S YOUR RIGHT.

LEARN MORE AT NYC.GOV/LEADFREE. Home_Reporter_and_Sunset_News_Spectator_ENG_10_x_6.8.indd 2

2/27/20 12:18 PM


Week of March 26 - April 1, 2020 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 3INB


Our World In Pictures

The Week in Pictures

NEW HAMPSHIRE — Early

start: Locals waited for their voting precinct to open outside Parker-Varney Elementary School in Manchester on Tuesday. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

MOMENTS OF SILENCE: Dylan Kyriacopoulos, left, and his fiance Mary Williams visit an empty Lincoln Memorial in Washington, Wednesday, March 25, 2020. Officials have urged Washington residents to stay home to contain the spread of the coronavirus. AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

e quarantined Diamond Princess cruise dditional 66 cases of novel coronavirus

AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko LOUD AND CLEAR: A billboard is installed on an apartment building in Cape Town, South Africa, Wednesday, March 25, before the country of 57 million people goes into a nationwide lockdown for 21 days from Thursday to fight the spread of coronavirus. AP Photo/Nardus Engelbrecht

WHERE IS EVERYBODY? Crosswalk signs outnumber the pedestrians in downtown Portland, Maine, just hours before a stay-at-home order goes into effect Wednesday, March 25. AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

Kill the cancer. Keep your prostate. Maimonides is the FIRST and ONLY medical center on the East Coast to offer the next generation focal HIFU treatment.

as fouled by Philadelphia’s Tobias Harhia on Sunday. AP Photo/Matt Slocum

ay, February 12, 2020 • BQ Daily Eagle • 9

The expert physicians at Maimonides are leading the way with the most advanced technology on the East Coast. Focal HIFU ( High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound) offers the most precise, image-guided treatment __ down to the millimeter __ and results in fewer side effects by selectively destroying the cancerous cells within the prostate while leaving the healthy areas intact and functional. Now available only at Maimonides.

Brooklyn’s Only Prostate Center The new Maimonides Prostate Center is the only full service prostate center in Brooklyn and is led by David Silver, MD, Chief,

Your life. To be continued. To speak with a prostate center specialist, call 888.MMC.DOCS or visit ProstateCenterNY.org

Division of Urology Director, Prostate Center. The Center is at the forefront of minimally invasive, multidisciplinary surgical and medical care, offering men facing a diagnosis of prostate cancer the most advanced technology and customized treatment options available.

4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of March 26 - April 1, 2020


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eye on REAL ESTATE See eye-catching homes on the perimeter of famous Green-Wood Cemetery By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

Brooklyn residents are going to Green-Wood Cemetery to take walks in its wide-open spaces during New York’s novel coronavirus lockdown. The graveyard is an excellent alternative to parks, where some people have been congregating in groups instead of practicing social distancing. As visitors head towards the famous 478-acre cemetery’s main entrance on Fifth Avenue at 25th Street, they get an eyeful of industrial buildings and construction sites. They may not realize the neighborhoods surrounding it are full of beautiful housing stock — and there’s a transit depot named for an old-school Brooklyn TV star. Here’s a look at some of the eye-catching homes on these peaceful blocks. If you don’t live within walking distance of this area, and therefore won’t be visiting it for the foreseeable future, this story can serve as a virtual tour for you. Neighborhoods along the cemetery’s perimeter include Greenwood Heights and a snippet of Sunset Park. I’m starting my story with Sunset Park because it’s the closer of the two neighborhoods to my Bay Ridge apartment, where I’m working during the coronavirus pandemic. To comply with social distancing rules, I am staying off subways and buses to leave more room on them for people who absolutely need to ride them.

The areas on the perimeter of Green-Wood Cemetery are full of handsome housing stock.

POBLANO PEPPERS AND MEXICAN SPICES On Sunday, when I walked around the area near GreenWood Cemetery, it took me one hour and one minute to get there from my apartment. (As I’ve mentioned, I stroll so slowly I’ve been told a sloth is probably my spirit animal.)

Rowhouses including 3904 Fifth Ave. (at right) extend down the block to 40th Street. The first place I stopped was the corner of Fifth Avenue and 39th Street. This location is close to the portion of the cemetery’s border that runs along 36th Street from Fifth Avenue to Seventh Avenue. On one corner of 39th Street, a grocery store called Guadalupita II occupies the ground floor of 3901 Fifth Ave. The shop is stocked with foods and spices from Mexico. In happier times, when Brooklyn wasn’t in the middle of a pandemic, I bought ingredients from this shop, schlepped them home on the subway and cooked (err, tried to cook) a Mexican dish called Poblano soup. On Sunday, food stores remained open on Fifth Avenue because they are deemed essential businesses. Several restaurants were open for takeout and delivery only, as bilingual signs in English and Spanish reminded customers. To give you a rough idea of what rowhouses with apartments and storefronts are worth in this part of Sunset Park, 3901 Fifth Ave. was sold for $3.2 million in 2015 to an LLC with Alan Wasserman as general manager and member, city Sunset Park Diner stands on this corner of Fifth Avenue and Finance Department records indicate. 39th Street. INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan On the opposite side of the street, there’s a handsome row of red-brick houses with storefronts that starts at 3904 Fifth tion, they do not. Ave. and extends south to the corner of 40th Street. So don’t be surprised that 889 Fifth Ave. is the address of the handsome building with barrel-vaulted window bays at the A HOTEL AMONG THE ROWHOUSES northeast corner of Fifth Avenue and 39th Street. Sunset Park Here’s a bit of Brooklyn trivia I should mention: The num- Diner is located on its first floor. bering system for Fifth Avenue addresses changes at the interThere are also 12 apartments in this four-story property, section of 39th Street. On the south side of the intersection, city Buildings Department records indicate. the first two digits in the address refer to the closest cross street Continued on page 9INB that’s north of the property. On the north side of the intersec-

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eye on REAL ESTATE See eye-catching homes on the perimeter of famous Green-Wood Cemetery Continued from page 8 INB A modern hotel, Wyndham Garden, can be found a few doors down from a beautiful brick apartment house on the fourth corner of 39th Street. The apartment house’s address is 888 Fifth Ave. and its ground-floor tenant is a restaurant called China Wok. CCL Management LLC, with Daniel Chen as member, built the hotel at 457 39th St. a few years ago. The LLC assembled the hotel site by buying two adjacent properties for a combined total of $1.545 million in 2012, Finance Department records indicate.

HOW SWEET IT IS

These rowhouses can be found on 36th Street near the cemetery.

On the corner of 36th Street, directly across from GreenWood Cemetery, there’s a mammoth brick and concrete building whose address is 871 Fifth Ave. It’s not much to look at. But a sign near the roof depicts a full moon and a city skyline and is emblazoned with the words “The Jackie Gleason Depot.” This NYC Transit System building is named after Brooklyn-born Jackie Gleason, one of the great comedians during broadcast television’s early decades. In his hit sitcom “The Honeymooners,” his character Ralph Kramden was a bus driver. The 919,000-square-foot depot’s dedication took place in 1988 with a crowd of about 1,200 people present, the Associated Press reported at that time. By the way, Gleason’s famous line, “How sweet it is,” was not something Ralph Kramden said in “The Honeymooners.” It’s from a 1963 movie called “Papa’s Delicate Condition.”

Continued on page 10INB

The modern building with the huge circular windows is the Wyndham Garden Hotel.

INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

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eye on REAL ESTATE See eye-catching homes on the perimeter of famous Green-Wood Cemetery Continued from page 9 INB Between 36th and 24th streets, the border of Green-Wood Cemetery runs along one side of Fifth Avenue. There are Greenwood Heights homes on the avenue’s other side. There’s a long-running debate about exactly where Greenwood Heights is located, and some people question whether it’s actually a neighborhood unto itself. But Community Board 7, in whose district it’s located, recognizes it as a neighborhood. And the use of the name Greenwood Heights to describe the area near the cemetery was used as long ago as the 1840s by the Brooklyn Eagle, a 2013 Curbed.com story notes.

THERE’S EYE CANDY ALL OVER THE PLACE On the corner of 34th Street, a siding-covered rowhouse whose address is 822 Fifth Ave. is painted with a colorful mural by a graffiti artist who uses the name VERS 718. A modern apartment building on the corner of 33rd Street and Fifth Avenue stands beside a row of beautiful, old-fashioned houses. To give you a rough idea of property values on this block, one of the homes in this row, namely 219 33rd St., sold for $1.295 million in 2016, Finance Department records indicate. There’s a pair of squared-off, flat-roofed houses at 219 and 221 31st St. Both have red awnings over their front doors. The facade of 219 31st St. is creamy-colored brick with red accents, and the facade of 221 31st St. is red brick with white accents. They’re pretty as a picture together. Further down the block, close to the intersection of Fourth Avenue, stucco-covered and siding-covered rowhouses looked serene in the mid-day sunshine.

At left is the development that, as originally planned, would have blocked views of the Statue of Liberty from INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan Battle Hill. PEDESTRIAN PATHWAYS NAMED AFTER PRESIDENTS On Fifth Avenue just north of the corner of 30th Street, there are yards with lush foliage growing on fences and brick rowhouses, some painted and some not. They’re an unusual and eye-pleasing sight. These are the backs of homes whose front entrances are on a pedestrian pathway called Roosevelt Court, which runs parallel to Fifth Avenue. To describe the setup more precisely, there are two sidewalks with homes facing each one, and garden space between the sidewalks. To give you an idea of what these houses are worth, 5 Roosevelt Court was sold in January for $975,000, Finance Department records show. When you stand on 30th Street in front of Roosevelt Court and do an about-face, you will see another set of homes and sidewalks laid out pretty much the same way. This is Woodrow Court. In 2015, the house at 10 Woodrow Court sold for $980,000 Finance Department records indicate.

PITA CHIPS AND A HIGH-PROFILE GREENHOUSE On 29th Street off Fifth Avenue, beautiful 2½-story rowhouses in varying shades of caramel and orange seem to stretch to infinity. On 27th Street between Fourth and Fifth avenues, oldfashioned red-brick rowhouses delight the eye. At Baked in Brooklyn at 755 Fifth Ave. near the corner of 26th Street, social distancing is being enforced. A sign on the door says a maximum of 10 people at a time are allowed to go inside. This is a division of Aladdin Bakers, which makes pita chips, flatbread crisps and crunchy breadsticks. The retail store, which is attached to a production facility, also sells fresh bread and pastries. There’s a construction fence obscuring all but the top of the Weir Greenhouse at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 25th Street, across from Green-Wood Cemetery’s main entrance. The cemetery is in the process of renovating the landmarked commercial greenhouse, which was built in 1895, and turning it into a visitors center. Green-Wood Cemetery bought the greenhouse for $1.625 million in 2012, and purchased an adjacent property for $1.5 million in 2015, Finance Department records show.

‘NUESTRO ANDAR FLORECE’ Green-Wood Cemetery’s Fifth Avenue border ends at 24th Street, where it turns east and extends to Sixth Avenue. There’s a Con Edison substation on this block, which I didn’t photograph. Before I leave Fifth Avenue, I should point out a former factory building on the corner of 23rd Street. Pablito’s Taqueria

eye on REAL ESTATE

and Restaurant occupies its storefront, whose address is 723 Fifth Ave. The Mixteca Organization, which offers programs and services for Mexican and Latin American immigrant families, has a community center in the building that uses the address 245 23rd St. The building’s 23rd Street facade is decorated with a vivid painting which is titled “Nuestro Andar Florece.” (The English translation is “Our Journey Blooms.”) Mexican women immigrants who now live in Brooklyn collaborated on this mural project, which was led by artists Michelle Angela Ortiz and Federico Zuvire. While I was taking photos on 23rd Street, a man wearing a big backpack and clutching a shopping bag in one hand rode by on a unicycle. His ability to balance on the one-wheeled vehicle was impressive. Further up the block, a handsome blue-hued house at 291 23rd St. caught my eye. It has changed hands four times in the past decade and a half. Finance Department records show the sale price was $220,000 in 2003, then $529,000 in 2005 and after that $850,000 in 2016. And in 2019, it sold for $1.325 million.

MINERVA’S VIEW OF LADY LIBERTY The border of Green-Wood Cemetery extends along Sixth Avenue from 24th Street to 23rd Street, then runs along 23rd Street to Seventh Avenue. Then it stretches along Seventh Avenue from 23rd Street to 20th Street. As I strolled through this area, another residential property with a beautiful blue-hued exterior got my attention. Its address is 301 23rd St. It has six apartments in it, Buildings Department records indicate. On the corner of 23rd Street and Seventh Avenue, there’s a lowrise condo development on a site that caused a big controversy. In 2005, property owner Chaim Nussencweig’s plan to construct a 70-foot-tall building at 614 Seventh Ave. came to light. The development would have blocked Green-Wood Cemetery visitors’ view of the Statue of Liberty from up on Battle Hill. That’s where a statue of Minerva, the goddess of wisdom and war, stands as a tribute to the brave soldiers who fought in the Revolutionary War’s Battle of Brooklyn on the terrain where the cemetery is situated. Minerva holds up her hand in a salute to Lady Liberty, in a gesture that mirrors Lady Liberty’s raising of her torch. In 2006, the developer signed an agreement with Green-Wood Cemetery to construct a shorter building at 614 Seventh Ave., which would allow the Statue of Liberty to remain visible to visitors on Battle Hill. The agreement was binding in perpetuity. So it remained in effect after another developer, Aaron Lebovits, bought the property for $1.04 million in 2008, Finance Department records show. He constructed 11 modern townhouses that look like a single building. And the view of Lady Liberty remains intact.

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CANALES, Josefa R. — On March 17, 2020 at her home in Bay Ridge. “Fina” was the beloved wife of the late Victor for 54 years, loving mother to her sons Victor of Emporia, Kansas (wife Barbara) and Anthony (wife Janet), and proud grandmother to Nicholas (Houston, Texas), Gregory (Lenexa, Kansas)

and Carolyn (Brooklyn). Her parents Antonio and Josefa and sister Antonia are all deceased. Born March 9, 1923 in Sada, Galicia, Espana. She has many wonderful cousins in her ancestral home of Galicia, Spain. She arrived in the U.S. in 1942 aboard a ship that had to take a longer route via Cuba to arrive in New Orleans, Louisiana. This route was required due to the threat from sinking by German U-boats along the east coast of the U.S. She became a naturalized citizen in 1949. She was a strong and humble “Gallega.” She worried first and foremost for everyone else, never asked for much attention to herself and never complained much.

She enjoyed her daily “jobs” of ironing, sewing, taking care of “Snoopy” the family dog and maintaining the outside of her property in Bay Ridge. Brooklyn. Living in a duplex house required walking many steps to traverse the multiple floors, which she did with incredible ease for a woman of advanced age. The family and neighbors were continually amazed. She was still walking to buy her groceries up to Fall 2019. She loved cooking her tortilla de huevos every Friday evening and she loved her morning coffee. She loved conversing in Spanish with Carolyn, who is an advanced student in Spanish and studying at Brooklyn College. She has left a lasting legacy of great LOVE through her children and grandchildren. Mass was Friday, March 20 at Saint Andrew the Apostle Church. Interment at Calverton National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, please make donations in Josefa’s memory to: Saint Andrew the Apostle Roman

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MOYA, Julian — On March 23, 2020. Burial took place Friday, March 27 at Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn.

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VAICIUNAS, Jadvyga — (nee Grincas), on March 18, 2020. Beloved wife of the late Kazimieras. Loving mother of George (Lucita), Eglé and Aldona. Jadvyga loved her dog “Sparky” and also enjoyed gardening. She was interred with her late husband Kazimieras at St. John’s Cemetery, Middle Village, Queens, on March 20 Mass was celebrated at Our Lady of Angels R.C. Church.

NOVENA TO ST. JUDE

Holy St. Jude, Apostle and Martyr, great in virtue and rich in miracles, near kinsman of Jesus Christ, Faithful intercessor of all who invoke your special patronage in time of need, to you I have recourse from the depth of my heart and humbly beg to who God has given such great assistance. Help me in my present and urgent petition. In return I promise to make your name known and cause you to be invoked. St. Jude, pray for all who invoke your aid. Amen. Say 3 Our Fathers, 3 Hail Marys and Glorias. Publication must be promised. This novena has never been known to fail. Prayer to St. Jude. God who through Thy blessed Apostle Jude has brought us into the knowledge of Thy name, grant that by advancing in virtue we may set forth his everlasting glory, and by steering forth, his glory we may advance in virtue through Our Lord Jesus Christ, thy Son, who livest and reignest with Thee in the united of the Holy Spirit, world without end. Amen, “Blessed Apostle, with confidence we invoke thee! St. Jude, help of the hopeless, aid me in my distress!” B.C.

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Brooklyn Daily Eagle cover from March 24, 1943

ON MARCH 24, 1900, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported, “Many a spadeful of earth has been upturned on Manhattan Island, but never was an upturning attended by so much significance as that performed with a silver spade in front of the City Hall this afternoon. For years New Yorkers, official and unofficial, rich and poor, have thought and talked about rapid transit, the ever growing problem of the metropolis. During the past twelve months, in municipal circles, there has been no topic to rival it in public importance, and today Mayor Van Wyck, in the presence of the Rapid Transit Commission and the invited guests of the city, made the work a reality and not a scheme. Millions of dollars will have to be spent before New York can be equipped with a transit system such as the commissioners have planned. To complete the project in its entirety will take a long time, but a start is everything, and this afternoon New York’s greatest public improvement had its formal beginning.”  ON MARCH 24, 1943, the Eagle reported, “WASHINGTON (U.P.) — The Office of Price Administration served notice on Americans today that they will do well to stop dreaming of steak and focus their appetites and point purchasing power on hamburger, stew and such delicacies as pigs’ ears, pork kidneys and beef brains. The OPA published the official list of points which housewives will have to fork over for meat, cheese, butter, fats, cooking oils and canned fish when rationing of those foods goes into effect next Monday. There are 16 points per person per week. Steak and butter each will be eight points per pound. So a pound of each would use up the entire 16 points. The points can be divided up among meats, fats and cheese any way a person desires. OPA officials predicted an average consumer might choose each week about two pounds of meat, three-fourths of a pound of butter and cooking fats, and two ounces of cheese, but thrifty housewives, in buying their weekly meat supplies, will be wise to consider the rib-sticking quality of what they purchase above its palate-tickling properties.” We are a Brooklyn Media company with multiple and in both Bay Ridge and(UP) publications ON MARCH 24,websites, 1953, thelocated Eagle reported, “LONDON Brooklyn. —Downtown Dowager Queen Mary, the grand old lady of the British Commonwealth, suffered an internal hemorrhage and her heart acWe arehas looking for talented, experienced representatives tion weakening seriously, it wassales disclosed today. physicians toiswork with our growing division inThe print and of digital the 85-year-old grandmother of Queen Elizabeth II fear she may advertising. not live through the day. The Archbishop of Canterbury, spiritual • Walk to work head of the Church of England, was summoned to her bedside • Make your own morning or afternoon after it became evident that her condition was desperate. Othfour-hour er members of theshift royal family, including the Duke of Windsor, • Baseson, salary, generous commission her favorite andplus Princess Mary, the Princess Royal, her only • Bonus opportunities daughter, gathered at her old brick mansion, Marlborough House. MustElizabeth, have: Basicwhom computer skills, bearms fluentas an Queen the old ladypositive used to attitude, hold in her infant, awaited a call bedside nearby Buckingham in English, and havetoathe clear phonefrom voice. Bilingual is a + Palace, where she was working state papers It was understood Great opportunity to make on full-time income…with a part-time that, in keeping with the standard that had made her beloved by all schedule. Telephone:(718) | Ext. 107died, her people, she had expressed the wish in 643-9099 her will that if she the coronation ofSend the young should be held as scheduled resumequeen to: Alice@brooklyneagle.com June 2.”  ALL SHOOK UP: Elvis Presley was inducted into the Army on March 24, 1958. The 23-year-old rock n’ roll sensation and budding movie star was sent for training at Fort Hood in Texas and shipped out to West Germany from the Brooklyn Army Terminal in September. Sgt. Presley was discharged on March 5, 1960.

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ON MARCH 26, 1862, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported, “The Official Census of the United States, which is just announced, makes the population thirty-one millions four hundred and twenty-nine thousand eight hundred and ninety-one (31,429,891). Of these, three millions nine hundred and fifty-one thousand eight hundred and one [are] slaves.”  ON MARCH 26, 1918, the Eagle reported, “That all expectation of developing the Eighth Ward Market site, in South Brooklyn, has been definitely deferred until after the war was disclosed today in a request issued at City Hall by Robert B. McIntyre, supervising statistician and examiner in the City’s Finance Department. Mr. McIntyre pointed out that on the site of the market an ‘aero storage’ building, 375x300 feet, has already been erected by the Navy. Other buildings between Thirty-sixth and Thirty-ninth streets, and between Second avenue and the waterfront, are planned by the Navy. A number of two-story wooden storehouses, completed several months ago, occupy part of the market site. Mr. McIntyre suggests in his report that after the war the larger buildings may be acquired by the city, and converted into market buildings at a reasonable cost. The property, originally under the jurisdiction of the Department of Public Markets, has been transferred, first to the Sinking Fund Commission, and by them back to the Dock Department, which turned it over to the Navy.”  ON MARCH 26, 1943, the Eagle reported, “An emergency shipment of 1,000,000 extra pounds of beef, in addition to ‘regular’ supplies, has been started on its way from the mid-West to New York City to cope with the meat shortage, Mayor [Fiorello] LaGuardia announced today. The entire shipment will reach the city for sale in butcher shops Monday. Bursting from a budget hearing in the Municipal Building, Manhattan, the mayor, who has been seeking extra meat supplies through the [Office of Price Administration] for some time, said: ‘I have good news. I am happy to be able to announce that due to the splendid co-operation of Sylvester Joseph, regional OPA director, and L.G. Booth, local food rationing director, New York City will be able to get 1,000,000 extra pounds of beef.’ The OPA, according to the mayor, invoked emergency powers vested in it to act when a food shortage ‘interferes with the morale of the civilian population in the war effort.’”  ON MARCH 26, 1945, the Eagle reported, “Home-fronters who have been wondering why the transport loads of furloughed soldiers don’t parade from the docks with bands blaring and flags waving got their answer yesterday from Maj. Gen. Homer M. Groninger, commander of the New York Port of Embarkation. ‘The soldier’s one desire is to get home as quickly as possible,’ General Groninger said, ‘and his desire is our desire. I doubt whether any soldier who has come back from the fighting fronts in this war seriously regrets not being in a parade. But in spite of the fact we have cut out the time-consuming frills, we have set up a ‘Welcome Home’ program which we believe expresses the gratitude of all Americans for the heroic deeds of our fighting men.”  ON MARCH 26, 1951, the Eagle reported, “The Kings County American Legion will send 5,000,000 cigarettes to the fighting boys in Korea, it was announced yesterday by Col. Charles A. Fisher, chairman of the Legion’s welfare committee, and Special Sessions Justice Matthew J. Troy, county commander. ‘Sending the cigarettes is in accord with our welfare program,’ said Colonel Fisher and Justice Troy in a joint statement. ‘It is one of the many aids that we have in our program of aiding not only veterans but also the boys who are today engaged in warfare.

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New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order last Friday mandating sweeping restrictions on businesses and social life across New York State due to the exponential spread of the novel coronavirus. The order, which he dubbed “PAUSE” (Policies Assure Uniform Safety for Everyone) went into effect last Sunday evening. “We’re going to take the ultimate step,” Cuomo said. Only essential businesses will be allowed to have employees working outside of the home, and all residents must remain indoors except for essential activities, he said. “One hundred percent of the nonessential workforce must work from home,” the governor said. This order does not apply to essential businesses, which include health care services, mass transit, police, fire and emergency responders, banks, caregivers, grocery stores, pharmacies and the internet and utilities among other essential services, he said. “You have to go to the ATM and get money. But not like luxury services. You want a massage, that’s not essential.” There are currently no penalties planned for individuals who violate the order, only businesses. “This is not voluntary. There will be civil fines and there could be mandatory closure for businesses that don’t comply,” Cuomo warned. The governor said the restrictions were necessary because of the acute shortage of hospital beds, medical protective supplies such as masks and gowns, and especially ventilators, coupled with an expected onslaught of patients with respiratory failure due to the virus. “Ventilators are to this war what missiles were to WWII,” he said, declaring to manufactures that the state will pay a premium to businesses that have or can make

the scarce devices. “I’m increasing the mandates because the numbers are increasing. You have the density control valve. If the numbers start to go up, tighten the valve,” Cuomo told reporters. To allow more businesses to work online, the state has asked internet providers to increase data capacity, and to do this at no charge, Cuomo said. Noting that there was some disagreement from some other state officials on the tighter restrictions, Cuomo said, “This is a statewide order. I take full responsibility.” Earlier last Friday, Cuomo announced that hair salons, barber shops, tattoo parlors and other personal care services would be closed beginning Saturday at 8 p.m. to slow the spread of the virus. That order didn’t have time to go into effect before it was superseded by the more sweeping “PAUSE” order. “This is not life as usual. Recognize it, accept it and deal with it,” Cuomo said. Mayor Bill de Blasio had warned New Yorkers last Tuesday that a “shelter-in-place” order similar to the one in effect in the Bay Area, and now throughout California, could be coming to New York City, a term that the governor quickly shut down. “I believe communications are important and words are important,” Cuomo said last Thursday, adding that the term shelter-in-place was more appropriate for an active shooter situation or, in past days, a nuclear disaster. “Say what you mean and don’t say what might alarm people,” he said. He added that years from now he wants to be able to look back and say, “I did everything we could do.” Individuals are still allowed to leave their homes for exercise, the governor said. “You need to get out and get some fresh air? Sure, go out and take a walk,” Cuomo said, with the provision that exercise be solitary. “Run, hike. Not basketball.”

He also said that the state would stop evictions of residential or commercial tenants for 90 days and noted that the deadline for filing federal taxes has been extended to July 15. The strictest rules would apply to the most vulnerable: Seniors over the age of 70, immuno-compromised people and those with underlying illnesses. People in these groups must remain indoors with the exception of “solitary exercise.” They have been told to pre-screen all visitors and aides by taking their temperature, not to visit households with multiple people and to wear a mask when in the company of others. People in vulnerable categories must stay at least six feet away from others, and not take public transportation unless absolutely necessary, Cuomo said. To the greatest extent possible, everyone in the presence of vulnerable people should wear a mask as well, the governor said. For those who are not in the vulnerable group, another set of rules applies. These include a ban on nonessential gatherings of any size for any reason, such as parties. At any essential gathering, social distancing must be in effect. This means staying at least six feet from others. Essential businesses must put in rules to maintain the six-feet standard. Outdoor recreation must be limited to non-contact activities. Commuters should limit the use of public transportation and must space themselves out by at least six feet. Sick people must not leave their homes except to go to medical appointments, and only after a telehealth appointment. Young people should try to limit their contact with vulnerable populations, even family members. The governor said that as of Friday morning, there were 7,102 confirmed cases in New York State, an increase of 2,950 since yesterday. By far the greatest number of these are in New York City, with 4,408 cases, up 1,939 since yesterday. Some of the increase is due to increased testing, the governor said.

Thursday, March 26, 2020 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • INSIDE BACK PAGE


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